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Biological and Somatic Treatment of Severe Mental Illness Before Modern Times Zachary Lane, MD September 8, 2015 Some Early Treatments • Trepanation • Bloodletting • Surgical Bacteriology Some Early Treatments • Tranquilizer Chair • Sensory Deprivation Chair Some Early Treatments • Restraints Asylum Reformation Movement • 18th and 19th Centuries • Moral therapy – Philippe Pinel – Benjamin Rush – Dorothea Dix Early Drug Therapies • • • • Used for behavioral control and sedation Decrease the use of restraints Many nonspecific indications Classes: – Natural remedies • Plant based (Alkaloids) – Synthesized in the lab • Strengthened the link between medical research and psychiatric treatment • Legitimized psychiatric conditions Early Drug Therapies • Natural remedies: – Opium, Morphine • Treat aggression, melancholy, and delusions • The addictive nature, toxicity, and side effects later became evident Early Drug Therapies • Synthesized in the lab (19th Century): – Mercury – treatment for mania – Bromides - treatment for seizures, stress, psychosis, mania, morphine addiction, alcoholism – Chloral Hydrate – hypnotic, “knockout drug” – Paraldehyde - hypnotic Early Drug Therapies • Synthesized in the lab: – Barbiturates (20th Century): • Barbital, Phenobarbital – Hypnotic, anxiolytic, anti-epileptic – Addictive, overdose potential Early Drug Therapies • Synthesized in the lab: – Amphetamines (20th Century): • Antidepressant, weight loss • “Pep pill” or inhalers • Addictive, led to anxiety/psychosis Prolonged Sleep Therapy (Continuous Narcosis) • 1910’s - 1930’s • Continuous administration of bromides or barbiturates • Sleep for 6-8 days • Briefly awaken to eat and toilet • Believed to give rest to an overactive nervous system Prolonged Sleep Therapy (Continuous Narcosis) • Treatment for psychosis, mania, agitated depression, & addictions • Effective for “shellshock” (PTSD) in World War I • Required intensive monitoring • Replaced by Insulin Coma Therapy in 1930’s • Later scandals – CIA’s MKULTRA (mind control) experiments, Australian Chelmsford Scandal Hydrotherapy • 1800’s to mid-1900’s • Using water to relieve “cerebral congestion” – Bring blood away from the brain and to the skin Hydrotherapy • Wet Sheet Pack – Sheet dipped in water and wrapped snuggly around patient for hours – Cold – agitated patient – Warm – frail patient Hydrotherapy • Continuous Bathing – Patient placed in tub with replenishing warm water and fastened in hammock for hours to days Hydrotherapy • Jet Streams and Steam Cabinets Malaria Fever Therapy • Neurosyphilis (General Paresis of the Insane) – Around 20% of patients institutionalized in early 20th Century – Physical and psychiatric problems, high mortality – Immoral patients seen as deserving of their fate – No cure (Penicillin not discovered until 1928) Malaria Fever Therapy • Hippocrates and Galen noted improvements in some patients after malaria • Julius Wagner-Jauregg – injected malaria into patients with Neurosyphilis to induce fever – Later would cure their malaria with Quinine • First full cure for a specific mental illness – Mental illness seen as having a biological cause Malaria Fever Therapy • Why it worked? – High fevers destroyed spirochetes – Stimulated the body’s immune response • Wagner-Jauregg won 1927 Nobel Prize in Medicine Malaria Fever Therapy • Malaria later replaced by other fever inducers into the 1950’s: inject foreign protein/chemicals, immerse in hot bath, electromagnetic currents, full body fever machine Shock Therapies • Shock Therapies: – Insulin Shock Therapy – Metrazol Convulsive Therapy – Electroconvulsive Therapy (ECT) • Initially used for treating psychosis based on erroneous belief that people with epilepsy cannot have comorbid psychosis • All found to be more effective for depression Shock Therapies: Insulin Shock Therapy • 1930’s - 1940’s • Daily injections of high doses of Insulin until coma induced • Treatments lasted hours and were terminated with glucose via IV or NG Tube • Courses lasted for ~60 days and required close monitoring • Replaced in 1940’s by ECT due to Insulin shortage during World War II Shock Therapies: Insulin Shock Therapy Shock Therapies: Metrazol Convulsive Therapy • 1930’s - 1940’s • Metrazol (Pentylenetetrazol) – circulatory and respiratory stimulant • Given via injection 2-3 times/week for several weeks • Caused “explosive seizure” one minute after administration that could cause fractures – Dread after administration • No antidote to reverse • Replaced in 1940’s by ECT Shock Therapies: Electroconvulsive Therapy (ECT) • 1930’s - Present Day • Electrically induced convulsions • Thought convulsions produced vitalizing compounds that had defense properties (“acro amines”) Shock Therapies: Electroconvulsive Therapy (ECT) • Easier to use, lower cost, fewer complications • Curare used in late 1940’s as muscle relaxant to decrease fractures • Amnesia viewed positively – “forget your depression” • ECT declined due to public opinion and the antipsychiatry movement in the 1960’s and 1970’s – more recent resurgence and still in use today as one of the most effective treatments in psychiatry Shock Therapies: Electroconvulsive Therapy (ECT) Warning The video on the following slide shows graphic medical procedures. Viewer discretion is advised. Shock Therapies: Electroconvulsive Therapy (ECT) Lobotomy Warning The video on the following slide shows graphic medical procedures. Viewer discretion is advised. Lobotomy Prefrontal Lobotomy • 1930’s – Egas Moniz • Some patients more docile after accidental frontal lobe damage • Cut strands connecting prefrontal cortex and thalamus – Rationale: neuronal pathways became “fixed” and needed to be disrupted • Initially used as “last resort” in severe cases • Moniz won 1949 Nobel Prize in Medicine Transorbital Lobotomy • 1940’s – Walter Freeman & James Watts • Exploded in popularity – Attempt to relieve state hospital burden – Expanding indications – no longer “last resort” – Took just minutes, no anesthesia, done in clinic – Children and adolescents as well Lobotomy • Initially thought to be a permanent cure but results turned out to be poor • Side effects: personality changes (childlike, disinhibited, apathetic), apraxia, cognitive problems, “lost the sparkle” • Waned in popularity in 1950’s with introduction of antipsychotic medication • Other types of psychosurgery still performed today in select cases Beginning of Modern Era of Psychiatric Treatment Early Modern Antipsychotic Medications • Chlorpromazine (Thorazine) – Synthesized in 1951 for use in general anesthesia – Also found to produce “euphoric quietude” where patients lost interest in their surroundings – First drug effective for psychotic symptoms (and not just sedation) • Dopamine antagonist -> led to dopamine excess theory of Schizophrenia Early Modern Antipsychotic Medications • Chlorpromazine (Thorazine) – Adopted by psychiatrists worldwide by mid-1950’s – Led to further development of 1st generation antipsychotics (neuropleptics) – Began deinstitutionalization movement Early Modern Antidepressant Medications • Iproniazid (1951) – Medication for Tuberculosis – Improved mood in depressed patients – Weak monoamine oxidase inhibitor • Led to monoamine theory of depression Early Modern Antidepressant Medications • Imipramine (1956) – Found serendipitously while trying to manufacture an antipsychotic medication – Improved mood in depressed patients – First Tricyclic Antidepressant (TCA) • Led to creation of other TCA’s and later SSRI’s Concluding Thoughts